On the Terms ‘Metaphysics’ and ‘Being-Qua-Being’

The Monist 52 (2):174-194 (1968)
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Abstract

If one consults a somewhat older philosophical dictionary, one is likely to find that the word ‘metaphysics’ designates that branch of philosophy which deals with objects transcending the objects of the world of senses. The word itself, so the dictionary will tell us, is indicative of it. ‘Metaphysics’ means ‘what comes after physics’. Physics, of course, deals with that which is sensible; meta in this context means ‘after’ in the sense of ‘higher than’. Metaphysics, then, is the theory of the supra-sensible, as indicated by its very name.

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